Bible reading group 6 – 27 July

Quick info:

  • Type of event: Online
  • Date: Every Tuesday 6th-27th July
  • Time: 1.10 pm to 2 pm
  • Location: n/a
  • Meeting point: n/a
  • Cost: Free
  • Booking instructions: Email  Mike.Peat@bristol.ac.uk

Students and staff are welcome to join this group, whatever religious views they hold. Each meeting is a chance to read and reflect together on passages from the bible, pondering such questions as “what was the author wanting to say?” and “what meaning could this have for us today?” (more…)

Read and Discover 7 – 28 July

Quick info:

  • Type of event: Online
  • Date: 7th-28th July
  • Time: 1 pm to 2 pm
  • Location: n/a
  • Meeting point: n/a
  • Cost: Free
  • Booking instructions: Email Jacqueline.Conradie-Faul@bristol.ac.uk

This group has a specific focus on reading the Bible with International Students, from any background, faith or belief. Each meeting provides an opportunity to read a specific Bible passage, reflect on the context in which it was written, learn to cross reference to relevant passages elsewhere in the Bible, and look at how the passage relates to our everyday life in a modern-day setting. No preparation is required! Simply come along to read, discover and share your thoughts in an informal and relaxed setting!

Psychoanalysis and Religion 22 & 23 July

Quick info:

Freud is famous for portraying religion as a collective neurosis of mankind: religious beliefs give expression to wish-fulfilling illusions serving the immature emotional needs of the child living on within the adult. Such illusions – he sternly maintains – should be cast aside and replaced by ideas corresponding to reality – namely, the materialistic world view that emerges gradually but inescapably from the cumulative process of scientific observation.

Seeking the Spirit Within 31 July

Quick info:

Ankita Sharma, an author of’ Seeking the Spirit Within’ will have an open discussion and a talk session with those interested in learning about and opening themselves to New Age Spirituality. Any hindrances or potential impediments on their path to a new awakening will also be discussed and how one can achieve the state of ever-lasting peace amid the pandemonium of a pandemic.

Evening of Mediumship 9 August

Quick info:

  • Type of event: In-Person
  • Date: 9th August
  • Time: 7.30pm-9.30pm
  • Location: Drill Hall
  • Meeting point: n/a
  • Cost: £11
  • Booking instructions:

Psychic Medium Nikki Kitt is a Spiritualist Medium who is currently touring the UK with her successful Psychic / Mediumship Evenings. As a Medium Nikki Kitt aims to provide evidence of life after life by getting links from loved ones in spirit for people in the audience with amazing accuracy in descriptions, personalities and all sorts of personal information.. to give both confirmation and comfort.

Witchcraft Curses of the Twentieth Century 8 August

Quick info:

The Museum of Witchcraft and Magic is in the beautiful Cornish village of Boscastle, UK. It was opened in this location in 1960 and is still there today. The founder of the museum, Cecil H Williamson, acquired an array of artifacts, some donated, some bought and some that he may have made. These artifacts include a collection that were made to harm, or worse, to kill. They do not all come from practitioners, some were made in domestic settings as revenge.  This lecture showcases some of the best collection in existence!

Museum of the Moon 11- 30 August

Quick info:

Bristol Cathedral is thrilled to host Luke Jerram’s celebrated Museum of the Moon in August 2021. Measuring seven metres in diameter, the moon features 120dpi detailed NASA imagery of the lunar surface. At an approximate scale of 1:500,000, each centimetre of the internally-lit spherical sculpture represents 5km of the moon’s surface.

Bristol Cathedral, virtual tour – on demand

Quick info:

  • Type of event: online
  • Date: on demand
  • Time: on demand
  • Location: virtualtour
  • Meeting point: n/a
  • Cost: free
  • Booking instructions: no booking required

Bristol Cathedral is one of England’s great medieval churches. It originated as an Augustinian Abbey, founded c.1140 by prominent local citizen, Robert Fitzharding, who became first Lord Berkeley. (more…)